It includes games with a cost-effective and swift release such as the best-selling Super Mario Bros. This includes the vast, open world, progress-saving adventures of the best-selling The Legend of Zelda (1986) and Metroid (1986). However, this boost to the market of affordable and writable mass storage temporarily served as an enabling technology for the creation of new types of video games. It uses proprietary floppy disks called 'Disk Cards' for cheaper data storage and it adds a new high-fidelity sound channel for supporting FDS games.įundamentally, the FDS device serves simply to enhance some aspects already inherent to the base Famicom system, with better sound and cheaper games-though with the disadvantages of high initial price, slow speed, and lower reliability.
The Family Computer Disk System, commonly referred to as the Famicom Disk System, is a peripheral for Nintendo's Family Computer home video game console, released only in Japan on February 21, 1986.